![]() _ gimp-user-list mailingīut the Gradient Editor has been around pretty much forever, its window is just not loaded into the toolboxes by default. I can go to color balance, or to various ways to color it after I've used I guess there's no way to turn it green and The 3-d effects of, for example, the Tube Red. ![]() Thanks, yes, I've found that one, and it works to fill an entire It's certainly doable, it just isn't as simple Its color to something else - you'd have to apply a consistent change the However something like the Tube Red is actually a bit more complicated thanĪ FG/BG fade (it uses more than two colors) so no, you can't "just" change To reference the "foreground" or "background" color instead of using aįixed color (right click a node handle and select the "Color Type"), On the one hand, using the Gradient Editor you can assign individual nodes On Mon, at 9:59 AM, Richard Gitschlag wrote: ButĮven if I did have the Editor, I can see that it's beyond my level. I guess it's time to upgrade from gimp 2.6. I appreciate the responses, which led me to experimenting. In the Blend Tool options, you can set the gradient to FG to BG Those gradients? To make them FG & BG Colors for Or Tube Red - Is there any way to choose the colors for Then pick oh, maybe Burning Transparency for example, Rectangular Selection > Blend tool > Gradient > So I guess I'd have to be able to choose the colors I can go to color balance, or to various ways to color it after I've used it, but all those Loosing the sense of depth that it gives. I guess there's no way to turn it green and blue w/o ![]() Thanks, yes, I've found that one, and it works to fill an entire selection. ![]() may not lie, but neither do they tell the whole truth. It's certainly doable, it just isn't as simple as it looks. On the one hand, using the Gradient Editor you can assign individual nodes to reference the "foreground" or "background" color instead of using a fixed color (right click a node handle and select the "Color Type"), however something like the Tube Red is actually a bit more complicated than a FG/BG fade (it uses more than two colors) so no, you can't "just" change its color to something else - you'd have to apply a consistent change the hue across like five nodes. ![]()
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